Kyiv, Ukraine — A small explosive device carried by a makeshift drone blew up Sunday at the headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet on the Crimean Peninsula, wounding six people and prompting the cancellation of ceremonies there honoring Russia’s navy, authorities said.
Meanwhile, one of Ukraine’s richest men, a grain merchant, was killed in what Ukrainian authorities said was a carefully targeted Russian missile strike on his home.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the drone explosion in a courtyard at the naval headquarters in the city of Sevastopol. But the seemingly improvised, small-scale nature of the attack raised the possibility that it was the work of Ukrainian insurgents trying to drive out Russian forces.
A Russian lawmaker from Crimea, Olga Kovitidi, told Russian state news agency RIA-Novosti that the drone was launched from Sevastopol itself. She said the incident was being treated as a terrorist act, the news agency said.
Crimean authorities raised the terrorism threat level for the region to “yellow,” the second-highest tier.
Sevastopol, which was seized along with the rest of Crimea from Ukraine by Russia in 2014, is about 170 kilometers (100 miles) south of the Ukrainian mainland. Russian forces control much of the mainland along the Black Sea.
The Black Sea Fleet’s press service said the drone appeared to be homemade. It described the explosive device as “low-power.” Sevastopol Mayor Mikhail Razvozhaev said six people were wounded. Observances of Russia’s Navy Day holiday were canceled in the city.
Ukraine’s navy and an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the reported drone attack underlined the weakness of Russian air defenses.
“Did the occupiers admit the helplessness of their air defense system? Or their helplessness in front of the Crimean partisans?” Oleksiy Arestovich said on Telegram.
If such an attack is possible by Ukraine, he said, “the destruction of the Crimean bridge in such situations no longer sounds unrealistic” — a reference to the span that Russia built to connect its mainland to Crimea after the annexation.
Elsewhere in Ukraine, the mayor of the major port city of Mykolaiv, Vitaliy Kim, said shelling killed one of Ukraine’s wealthiest men, Oleksiy Vadatursky, and his wife, Raisa. Vadatursky headed a grain production and export business.
Another presidential adviser, Mykhailo Podolyak, said Vadatursky was specifically targeted.
It “was not an accident, but a well-thought-out and organized premeditated murder. Vadatursky was one of the largest farmers in the country, a key person in the region and a major employer. That the exact hit of a rocket was not just in a house, but in a specific wing, the bedroom, leaves no doubt about aiming and adjusting the strike,” he said.
Vadatursky’s agribusiness, Nibulon, includes a fleet of ships for sending grain abroad.
In the Sumy region in Ukraine’s north, near the Russian border, shelling killed one person, the regional administration said. And three people died in attacks over the past day in the Donetsk region, which is partly under the control of Russian-backed separatist forces, said regional Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko.
Podolyak said on Twitter that images of the prison where at least 53 Ukrainian prisoners of war were killed in an explosion on Friday indicated that the blast came from within the building in Olenivka, which is under Russian control.
Russian officials have claimed the building was attacked by Ukraine with the aim of silencing POWs who might be giving information about Ukrainian military operations. Ukraine has blamed Russia for the explosion.
Satellite photos taken before and after show that a small, squarish building in the middle of the prison complex was demolished, its roof in splinters.
Podolyak said those images and the lack of damage to adjacent structures showed that the building was not attacked from the air or by artillery. He contended the evidence was consistent with a thermobaric bomb, a powerful device sometimes called a vacuum bomb, being set off inside.
The International Red Cross asked to immediately visit the prison to make sure the scores of wounded POWs had proper treatment, but said Sunday that its request had yet to be granted. It said that denying the Red Cross access would violate the Geneva Convention on the rights of POWs.
Donald Trump has appeared to drop his strongest hint yet at another presidential run in 2024, responding to news of his two-year ban from Facebook on Friday by saying he would not invite Mark Zuckerberg to dinner “next time I’m in the White House”.
It has also been widely reported this week that Trump believes he will be reinstated in the presidency by August.
He will not. But in his statement on Friday he did not say if he thought he would return to the White House because he would be reinstated or because he would run for the Republican nomination again and then defeat Joe Biden or another Democrat.
Trump’s statement read: “Next time I’m in the White House there will be no more dinners, at his request, with Mark Zuckerberg and his wife. It will be all business!”
Trump has a history of using public statements to troll his opponents and a long record of lies and exaggerations and promoting baseless conspiracy theories. At the same time Trump has maintained a strong grip on the Republican party and there is intense speculation about whether or not he would run for the presidency again.
Nick Clegg, the former British deputy prime minister who is now Facebook’s vice-president of global affairs, announced the social media website’s ban on Trump until 2023.
It follows the recommendation of Facebook’s oversight board. Trump has been suspended from the social media site since January, when he incited supporters to attack the US Capitol in service of his lie that his defeat by Joe Biden was the result of electoral fraud.
In a first statement on the suspension, Trump said it was an “insult” to those who voted for him in “the rigged presidential election” and said: “They shouldn’t be allowed to get away with this censoring and silencing.”
Amid striking polling about support for his lies among Republican voters, Trump still dominates polls of possible contenders for the party’s nomination in 2024.
Trump appears to be convincing himself the election was stolen and that some mechanism exists by which he might be reinstated, a belief apparently stoked by Mike Lindell, the chief executive of MyPillow and a hardline Trump supporter.
According to CNN, which confirmed reporting by Maggie Haberman of the New York Times and by the conservative National Review, Trump has asked advisers: “What do you think of this theory?”
A source also told CNN: “People have told him that it’s not true.”
Más de cien migrantes procedentes de diversos países centroamericanos que viajaban en la parte trasera de un camión de carga fueron rescatados por las autoridades mexicanas en el estado oriental de Veracruz, que es una ruta tradicional de los flujos irregulares de personas hacia Estados Unidos.
Los migrantes —55 hombres, 19 mujeres y 41 niños— viajaban en la parte trasera en condiciones “deplorables”, por lo cual recibieron atención médica, dijo el domingo una fuente del gobierno de Veracruz.
Según el parte policial, todas las personas recibieron atención médica, rindieron declaración y fueron trasladadas al puerto de Veracruz.
“Los migrantes fueron atendidos inmediatamente por paramédicos de la dependencia, al presentar severos signos de deshidratación (…) el Ejército Mexicano y la Marina-Armada (…) se trasladaron a Playa Muñecos para brindarles atención”, dijo la misma fuente.
De acuerdo con una ficha informativa de la policía estatal veracruzana, los hechos tuvieron lugar el sábado, cuando sus elementos se trasladaron a la localidad de Playa Muñecos, en el municipio de Alto Lucero, para apoyar al Instituto Nacional de Migración (INM) con el traslado de al menos 115 personas, entre hombres, mujeres y niños.
Durante el operativo, también fueron detenidas las dos personas que transportaban a los migrantes.
Traficantes de personas suelen utilizar este tipo de unidades para cruzar ilegalmente a migrantes a Estado Unidos, cobrando miles de dólares por cada traslado.
Veracruz es un estado que por años ha sido paso para la migración ilegal a Estados Unidos, pero además se ha convertido en uno de los más violentos del país, con miles de muertos y desaparecidos.
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El Instituto Uruguayo de Meteorología prevé que a partir de este martes se registre la mayor fuerza del ciclón extratropical que se acerca a Uruguay. Actualmente rige una advertencia amarilla por tal fenómeno, pero está prevista que la misma cambie a color naranja en las próximas horas.
En Montevideo ya se registraron destrozos por los fuertes vientos, que están incrementando cada hora su fuerza. Según informó Telemundo, en la rambla de Montevideo hay paradas de ómnibus que quedaron rotas, así como cartelería en general.
Las autoridades de Inumet informaron que desde el miércoles de la semana pasada vienen monitoreando la situación y que en caso de que sea necesario emitir una alerta roja lo harán con tiempo suficiente para que la población tome previsiones. Explicaron que un “ciclón” como el anunciado no es otra cosa “una depresión frontal o baja presión”, al tiempo que aclararon que “esto no es ciclón tropical, sino extra tropical”.
“Es un trabajo que vamos a tener que hacer lo para que la gente cuando escuche esa palabra no piense que se termina el mundo y genere esa alarma que se generó en los últimos días”, añadió.
En relación a la ciudad de Dolores dijeron que ahora hay lluvias y tormentas y “más que el nivel de riesgo amarillo que está vigente no están relacionando otro monitoreo” puntual.
Miembros de una milicia cercana a un influyente diputado afgano, decapitaron a cuatro combatientes afiliados al grupo yihadista Estado Islámico (EI) en una región inestable de Afganistán. y exhibieron sus cabezas en una carretera muy frecuentada, informaron este domingo las autoridades locales.
Según Haji Zahir, vicepresidente del parlamento afgano, el EI había decapitado a cuatro milicianos allegados a él, por lo que se actuó en represalia. “¿Si a usted lo decapitan, o decapitan a sus hijos, espera que le obsequiemos flores a sus verdugos?”, exclamó en una conferencia de prensa. “No se lanzan flores durante una guerra. La gente muere”, subrayó.
“Ellos (los combatientes del EI) eran criminales, entonces tendrían que haber sido juzgados”, explicó, por su parte, el gobernador del distrito, Haji Ghaleb.
El EI, controla grandes territorios en Siria e Irak y en los últimos meses logró implantarse en la provincia de Nangarhar tras expulsar a los rebeldes talibanes, para quienes esta región es uno de sus feudos.
En Afganistán, el EI ha logrado atraer a numerosos talibanes decepcionados con la dirección de su movimiento.
Cuando María Teresa Paucar habla de sus triunfos en la Quito-Últimas, sus ojos brillan como queriendo retroceder el tiempo. “Gané en 1986 y 1987“, dice con un orgullo que le sale del fondo de su alma.
“En esos años había un grupo de 15 a 20 atletas de alto nivel y ganar la Últimas Noticias requería una gran preparación”, añade la atleta hoy con 55 años, que participa, al menos dos veces al mes, en carreras que se organizan en el país y donde siempre sube al podio en la categoría supermáster .
“En la cuesta desde el Machángara hasta Santo Domingo era la prueba de fuego. Yo era buena escaladora y ahí fue donde le saqué ventaja a Martha Tenorio. En esos años que gané también participaron Yolanda Quimbita, Sandra Ruales, Soledad Villamarín, Graciela Caizabanda y Marcia Chiliquinga“.
Su paso por la 15K la ayudó a “salir a la palestra. Fui seleccionada y representé al país en el Sudamericano de Chile donde gané la medalla de plata en los 10 000 m y bronce en los 3 000 m. También fui a los Panamericanos en Indianápolis, donde fui novena”. Por eso recomienda a los deportistas que se inscriban en la prueba. “Es emocionante vivir cada tramo de la carrera para los deportistas profesionales y los aficionados, es una experiencia inolvidable”, dice.
Lastimosamente el 7 de junio no estará en la edición 55. El martes último fue sometida a una intervención quirúrgica debido a una dolencia en el cuello. Su rehabilitación le impedirá estar en la prueba.
Para María Teresa, su esposo Gonzalo y su hijo Paúl ocupan un lugar especial. También sus padres, Angelina Guanotoa y Rafael Paucar, que están por cumplir 99 y 100 años, en ese orden, y a quienes cuida todos los días. “Como hace 25 años nos ofrecieron una beca para entrenar en Estados Unidos. Martha Tenorio se fue, yo me quedé por cuidarles”.
Silvio Guerra ‘Correr la Últimas Noticias es como llegar a una Olimpiada. Durante el trayecto los atletas recibimos el calor de la gente, su buena energía”, relató Silvio Guerra, el carchense que ganó en cinco ocasiones la 15K.
En 2009 fue la última vez que corrió la prueba, “que por su importancia es la competencia que ningún atleta se quiere perder”. Detalla que la Últimas Noticias es diferente por la topografía de su trayecto. “Existe un desgaste muscular por las subidas y bajadas. El entrenamiento y la preparación son importantes para soportar esos cambios bruscos”, así como para planificar la estrategia de cuándo atacar”.
Silvio Guerra ganó cinco ediciones: 1994, 1997, 1998, 2000 y 2001. “Esas carreras fueron importantes y también las que no gané como en 1995”. Ese año se vivió una de las carreras más mediáticas por su rivalidad con Rolando Vera. Corrieron codo a codo hasta la famosa cuesta de Santo Domingo, donde ninguno de los dos se decidía a dar el jalón. Vera se sintió con más fuerza y llegó primero. En adelante cuidó su primer lugar hasta llegar a la meta. “En esa ocasión me sobreentrené”, recordó Guerra.
Vive en Estados Unidos donde ha incursionado en otras prácticas deportivas como el duatlón y ahora “me estoy entrenando para intervenir en el medio Ironman que se realizará en Manta. Ya competí en la Guayasman, y me gustó”.
Silvio Guerra llegó a Quito para pasar con doña Teresa el Día de la Madre. Ese domingo compitió en la PUCE 8K como parte de su entrenamiento. Guerra aún mantiene en su poder el récord nacional de la maratón con un registro de 2:09:42 horas que lo logró en la Maratón de Chicago en 1997.
Pero en su carrera, la Quito Últimas es parte de su crecimiento deportivo. Por eso recomienda a los atletas que participen en la prueba más importante del país. “Los participantes nos contagiamos del apoyo de las personas que salen a las calles a vernos”, dice.
Miguel Almachi, quiteño de 30 años, forma parte de la nueva generación de atletas de fondo que tiene Ecuador. Junto con el cotopaxense Segundo Jami y el azuayo Byron Piedra han tenido que hacer frente a la tropa extranjera que cada año compite en la 15K.
“Ese año compitieron dos kenianos y un peruano”, inicia en el relato Almachi, quien ganó la Quito–Últimas Noticias en el 2013. “Si analizamos, el recorrido no es complicado, pero la carrera tiene algo especial que se torna difícil”.
Si bien dice que la famosa cuesta ‘rompecorazones’ desapareció del recorrido desde 2006, el actual trayecto tiene sus exigencias, “el tramo más complicado está entre los km 8 y 9, por el Banco Central, donde hay subidas y bajadas que parecen que son imperceptibles, pero que desgastan al atleta”.
Dice que en este sector muchos atletas se rezagan, “pero hay que estar muy fuerte porque recién en el kilómetro 12 y 13 es donde se define la carrera, es decir por el parque La Carolina”. Pero si bien es en estos tramos donde hay que estar fuerte física y mentalmente para asumir el enorme esfuerzo físico, se compensa en el último kilómetro cuando culmina la carrera.
“Uno se emociona cuando llega al estadio Atahualpa. Recuerdo que la gente, que está en las afueras empieza a gritar “es el primero, es el primero”. Con esa emoción se recorre el anillo atlético y llega a la meta cansado, pero feliz”.
El último fin de semana Miguel fue a Estados Unidos para intervenir en un Torneo Invitacional, donde corrió los 5 000 metros. “Desde el miércoles continúo con mis entrenamientos, estoy listo para correr la Últimas Noticias”, dijo.
Almachi corrió la Maratón de los Juegos Olímpicos en Londres 2012. En julio espera competir en los 10 000 m de los Juegos Panamericanos en Toronto y luego buscará la marca para correr en los Olímpicos de Río de Janeiro 2016.
A drip, drip, drip of state restrictions has made abortion harder to obtain.
Abortion is still legal in the United States, but for women in vast swaths of the country it’s a right in name only.
Six states are down to only one abortion clinic; by the end of this week, Missouri could have zero. Some women seeking abortions have to travel long distances, and face mandatory waiting periods or examinations. On top of that, a new wave of restrictive laws, or outright bans, is rippling across GOP-led states like Alabama and Georgia.
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Both sides of the abortion battle are focused on the future of Roe v. Wade, but opponents have already won the ground game over the past decade, chipping away at abortion access.
The Supreme Court’s new conservative majority, about to wrap up its first term, has not yet taken up a case challenging Roe. Just this week it declined to reinstate an Indiana law, signed by Mike Pence when he was governor, that would have banned abortion on the basis of gender, race or fetal disability. But that’s no guarantee the court won’t take another look at the landmark 1973 abortion rights ruling.
But even without the high court, GOP-backed laws have added restrictions and obstacles, whittling away access. Since the start of the Trump administration, hostility to abortion in general and Planned Parenthood in particular has only intensified in statehouses around the country.
“We celebrate freedom in America. But I believe that my choice ends when another life begins,” Louisiana state Rep. Valarie Hodges said just before a fetal “heartbeat” abortion bill passed there.
Years of piecemeal state laws have left their mark. Mandatory waiting periods, travel, missed work and lost wages all make getting an abortion more expensive and more difficult, particularly for low-income women. Doctors and clinic staff have to face protesters, threats, proliferating regulations and draining legal challenges; clinics have closed. In remote parts of the midwest and south, women may have to travel more than 300 miles to end a pregnancy.
“This is a moment of seeing how all of these laws fly in the face of medicine and science and go against what we in the medical profession know, which is that any restriction on medical care by politicians will endanger people’s health,” Planned Parenthood President Leana Wen, a physician herself, said in an interview.
It’s intensified of late. Republicans in Alabama and other states have raced to enact laws that would almost completely ban abortion, sometimes without exceptions for pregnancies that result from rape or incest. Eight states have enacted laws which, if allowed to go into effect, would ban abortion once a fetal heartbeat can be detected, as early as the sixth week of pregnancy, when many women don’t even know they are pregnant. (Missouri’s variant is eight weeks.) Alabama has gone even further, granting “personhood” and legal rights from conception.
Those laws may eventually reach the Supreme Court and test Roe, the 1973 decision that recognized women’s right to abortion. But those statutes aren’t what’s crimping access nationwide right now. That’s happened through a drip, drip, drip of lower-profile efforts that have created obstacles for pregnant women and led to a dwindling supply of doctors trained and willing to perform abortions.
Many of those laws were promoted as attempts to make abortion safer — though courts often disagreed and threw them out as unconstitutional barriers. Now, abortion opponents are openly talking about ending the practice altogether.
“The strategy used to be death by a thousand cuts,” said Colleen McNicholas, a physician based in St. Louis who also provides abortions in Kansas and Oklahoma. “They’re no longer pretending things are to promote the health and well-being of women, which is what we used to hear all the time. Now they’re being very bold and upfront.”
“It doesn’t change the fact that for many Americans, particularly for women in the middle [of the country] and the South, abortion is inaccessible,” she added.
Data from the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that supports abortion rights, shows that 788 clinics in the U.S. provided abortion services in 2014 — a drop of 51 clinics over three years. Since 2013about 20 clinics have closed just in Texas.
Further, one in five women would have to travel at least 43 miles to get to a clinic, according to a Guttmacher analysis from October 2017. In North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming, at least half of the women between 15 and 44 years old lived more than 90 miles from a clinic.
Six states — Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi, North Dakota, South Dakota and West Virginia — have only one clinic left that performs abortions, according to a recent analysis from Planned Parenthood and Guttmacher. Lawmakers in many of those states have pursued limits in when abortion can be allowed — such as fetal heartbeat laws or 15-week bans, though the laws have been blocked in court. Four of those states have also passed so-called trigger laws that would ban abortion immediately should the Supreme Court overturn Roe.
In Missouri, the sole clinic, which is in St. Louis, could close this week. On the surface, it’s a dispute with the state health department over licensing, safety and regulation, but the showdown comes just days after state lawmakers passed a ban on abortion after eight weeks of pregnancy, with no exceptions for rape or incest.
“States have been marching down this path for a number of years. The restrictions that have passed previously have set the stage for the bans this year,” said Elizabeth Nash, Guttmacher’s senior state issues manager. “It’s counseling, it’s waiting periods, it’s abortion coverage in your health plan. It’s limits on abortion providers, such as unnecessary clinic regulations.”
“Missouri is the first and other states could be next,” Planned Parenthood’s Wen said on a recent call with reporters.
The ramifications of the anti-abortion movement’s sustained assault against Planned Parenthood are perhaps no clearer than in Texas, where lawmakers have passed dozens of restrictive laws, including mandatory ultrasounds, waiting periods and state funding restrictions.
The Supreme Court overturned another set of Texas restrictions in 2016 — but not before about 20 clinics shut down, many of which were never able to reopen. Providers retired, staff found other jobs and clinics had to start from scratch to get licensed and staff up. “All of those things take time and a significant amount of money,” said Kari White, an associate professor in Health Care Organization and Policy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and an investigator with the Texas Policy Evaluation Project.
Even though Texas permits abortions until 20 weeks — itself a cut-off point that conflicts with Roe v. Wade, although it hasn’t yet come to the Supreme Court — abortion access has sharply declined. That scenario is likely to play out in other conservative states, even if they don’t go as far as Georgia or Alabama.
More than half of Texas’ 41 abortion clinics closed or stopped performing abortions after the state passed legislation in 2013 that bundled several onerous restrictions, according to research from the Texas Policy Evaluation Project. The average distance a woman had to travel one way for an abortion jumped to 35 miles from 15 miles. In rural parts of the state, drives of 100 miles or more to access care are not uncommon, according to the group.
The evaluation project found that while the number of abortions overall declined after the Texas law went into effect, the number of second-trimester abortions rose as women were forced to wait and travel longer distances. Currently only about 22 abortion providers, mostly in urban areas, are operating in Texas, a state with roughly 6.3 million women of reproductive age.
Low-income women are disproportionately affected by abortion restrictions, said Kamyon Conner, executive director of the Texas Equal Access Fund, which helps women who can’t afford an abortion, which costs between $500 and $10,000 dollars depending on the point in pregnancy. The nonprofit was part of a group that challenged dozens of Texas abortion restrictions in court.
Calls to the group’s hotline have tripled over the past few years to 6,000 in 2018, but it only funded about 1,000 women last year, she said. Some of those women are undocumented immigrants, some are incarcerated and others have children but cannot afford to raise more.
Other costs mount — both in money and time, Conner said. Because Texas has a 24-hour waiting period between an initial consult and the abortion, women miss work and may have to pay for hotel rooms.
“There are fewer clinics to provide the services,” said Conner. “The few clinics that are left are in very high demand.”
Telemedicine could plug some gaps in care for women seeking abortion medication, instead of a surgical abortion. But there too access varies widely by geography. Some states ban telemedicine-facilitated abortions. Elsewhere, providers are using video-chat technology to dispense the medication. Seventeen states require licensed abortion providers to be physically present when administering abortion medication, which effectively is a ban on telemedicine, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Abortion medication is approved for use up to ten weeks into pregnancy, but under current FDA rules can only be dispensed at certain medical facilities, including abortion clinics.
Alternatives are being tested. In one FDA-reviewed study, clinicians can mail abortion medication directly to patients after a video chat. Study participants can go to any clinic for their screening and ultrasound, send the results to a participating abortion provider, and then video chat with that provider. If appropriate, the provider can decide to dispense the medication to the patient’s address, and the patient can take it at home.
Under this system, women don’t have to travel several hours just to pick up the abortion pills, Erica Chong, director of Gynuity Health Projects, told POLITICO. The Gynuity study has enrolled about 360 people across eight states since 2016; it builds on recent research concluding that telemedicine-facilitated medical abortions are just as safe for patients as the ones administered in-person.
Because it’s been reviewed by the FDA, the Gynuity trial is exempt from the dispensation limitation. The study operates in Maine, New York, New Mexico, Hawaii, Colorado, Oregon, Washington and Georgia. Gynuity’s trial in Georgia began a few weeks ago, shortly before the state passed its “fetal heartbeat” law.
“With a lot of these bans, there’s going to be a long legal battle,” Chong said, explaining that she didn’t expect the new Georgia law, which bans abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected at about six weeks, to affect the study in that state just yet. But she noted that the recent spate of early abortion bans have alarmed patients, who are unsure whether their appointments are still legal.
Gynuity’s goal is to convince the FDA that dispensing abortion medication directly to women’s homes, or even to retail pharmacies, is safe and effective, and that restrictions on its dispensation should be eased, Chong said.
Outside the Gynuity trial, some providers across the country let patients drive to the facility closest to them and video chat a clinician located at another site. Planned Parenthood, for instance, lets patients in 14 states virtually consult with clinicians based elsewhere. Yet in many cases, the clinician must watch the patient ingest the pill on screen to comply with federal restrictions limiting where the medication can be dispensed. Women might still have to travel across state lines to access these services — and many don’t even realize these options exist.
“How’s a woman in Alabama going to know to go to a Georgia clinic to find services?” Chong said.
Dicen que es una enfermedad del pasado, pero los síntomas están más presentes que nunca…
En NOTICIAS de esta semana:
Cristinosis: furia en la grieta de un país neurótico. Por odio, amor o morbo, todos hablan sin para de la ex presidenta. La histeria financiera y el presente del que Macri intenta huir para no hablar de crisis.
Máximo K. El hijo de la ex presidenta es custodiado por un ex agente de Inteligencia K que podría ser su doble.
Macri gato. Habla Facundo Scalia, el inventor del eslogan anti PRO que viralizó en las redes sociales. El merchandising.
Famosas a los 50. La quinta década no sólo trae cambios hormonales. La madurez emocional es un valor agregado a esa nueva etapa de la vida.
Además:
Los conflictos de Antonella Roccuzzo con los Messi
Y… la trastienda del golpe a La Salada.
Y Cine, Restaurantes, Teatro, Música, Internacionales, Ciencia, Economía y más, mucho más.
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En las noticias más leídas del día, Grupo Financiero Banorte, que preside Carlos Hank González, ha venido posicionándose en los primeros lugares del sistema financiero mexicano. Javier Duarte ya está en México, el siguiente paso del caso en contra del exgobernador de Veracruz es la etapa de investigación, que puede durar de dos a seis meses.
1. FMI sube a 1.9% su pronóstico de crecimiento para México en 2017
Este año la economía mexicana alcanzará un crecimiento de 1.9% según pronósticos del Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI). Esta previsión incorpora una revisión al alza sobre la que tenía el organismo en enero y abril cuando esperaba una expansión de 1.7 por ciento.
En la actualización trimestral del Panorama Económico Mundial (WEO, por su sigla en inglés), el FMI detalla que esta corrección al alza es explicada por la fortaleza que presentó la actividad económica en el primer trimestre del año.
FMI sube a 1.9% su pronóstico de crecimiento para México en 2017. Ver nota.
2. Uber puede acabar siendo un mero holding como Yahoo
La plataforma Yahoo comenzó como pionero y terminó siendo un mero holding. Lo mismo podría pasarle a Uber.
En los embriagadores días de 1999, el valor de mercado de Yahoo se disparó más allá de los 100,000 millones de dólares. El mes pasado, la compañía entregó los últimos vestigios de su negocio online a Verizon por 4,500 millones. Los 56,000 millones que vale lo que queda, Altaba, son participaciones en Alibaba y YahooJapón, y 11,000 millones en efectivo.
Mientras, los obstáculos legales y regulatorios se le acumulan a Uber, junto al fracaso de su cultura laboral, que la ha dejado sin su cofundador y CEO Travis Kalanick, entre otras bajas de directivos.
Uber puede acabar siendo un mero holding como Yahoo. Ver nota.
3. ¿Cuántos fracasos del Tri has vivido?
México fue derrotado 1-0 por Jamaica. Adiós a la soñada y esperada final para Concacaf y con ello también adiós a varios millones de dólares.
Siendo sinceros, el Tri de Osorio y Pompilio demostró desde el primer partido que era demasiado limitado: en el futbol y en su carácter.
Un gol a falta de tres minutos del final de tiro libre dio a los jamaiquinos la posibilidad de disfrutar la final ante Estados Unidos que hizo los deberes ante Costa Rica y los derrotó 2-0. Si quieres conocer más sobre la opinión de Ivan Pérez con respecto a esto, entra a la nota completa.
4. ¿Qué etapa sigue en el caso contra Javier Duarte?
Este fin de semana pasado, un juez de control del Reclusorio Norte de la Ciudad de México decidió que existen suficientes pruebas para vincular a proceso al exgobernador de Veracruz, Javier Duarte de Ochoa. El siguiente paso del caso en su contra es la etapa de investigación, que puede durar de dos a seis meses y en la cual los fiscales de la Procuraduría General de la República deberán recabar todas las pruebas que comprueben la participación del exmandatario en delitos de lavado de dinero y delincuencia organizada.
La audiencia de vinculación a proceso fue distinta para el exgobernador de Veracruz y su equipo de defensa. Según información de Arturo Ángel, de Animal Político, los gestos de burla y las sonrisas de Duarte quedaron atrás debido, en principio, a que la PGR “duplicó su fuerza.
¿Cuál es la siguiente etapa en el caso contra Javier Duarte?. Ver nota.
5. Banorte pelea por el segundo lugar de la banca; en utilidades ya lo logró
Grupo Financiero Banorte, se ha posicionado en los primeros lugares del sistema financiero mexicano. Tan es así, que hoy ya hay una disputa por el segundo lugar entre tres instituciones, incluida la de origen regiomontano. Hoy ya es el segundo banco que más utilidades genera.
En entrevista, el nieto de Carlos Hank González y de Roberto González Barrera, atribuye parte de este éxito a que Banorte, al ser un banco mexicano, conoce mejor que ningún otro el mercado local y toma sus decisiones aquí. Ahora la meta, dice, es consolidarse como el mejor grupo financiero y, por lo tanto, como el mejor banco de México. Si para lograrlo hay una oportunidad en el camino para adquirir otro banco, se analizaría.
Banorte pelea por el segundo lugar de la banca; en utilidades ya lo logró. Ver nota.
In a Saturday statement, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused an NPR host and veteran reporter of lying, being an example of the “unhinged” media, and misidentifying Bangladesh as Ukraine on a map.
On Friday, NPR’s “All Things Considered” host Mary Louise Kelly interviewed Pompeo, and asked him questions about the United States’ support for Ukraine and the ouster of former US ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch.
But Kelly said that after the interview, Pompeo yelled at her for asking the questions on Ukraine in his office, cursed her out, and asked her if she could identify the country of Ukraine on a map.
In his Saturday statement, Pompeo said that Kelly “lied to me, twice” last month and on Friday in “agreeing to have the post-interview conversation off the record,” but did not deny that he cursed and yelled at her.
In a Saturday statement, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accused an NPR host and veteran reporter of lying, being an example of the “unhinged” media, and misidentifying Bangladesh as Ukraine on a map.
But Kelly said that after the interview, Pompeo yelled at her for asking the questions on Ukraine in his office, cursed her out, and asked her if she could identify the country of Ukraine on a map.
“I was taken to the Secretary’s private living room where he was waiting and where he shouted at me for about the same amount of time as the interview itself,” Kelly recounted after the interview. “He was not happy to have been questioned about Ukraine.”
“He asked, ‘Do you think Americans care about Ukraine?'” she added. “He used the F-word in that sentence and many others.”
Kelly added that Pompeo asked his aides to bring a blank map into his office and told her to point to Ukraine, saying, “people will hear about this.”
In his Saturday statement, Pompeo said that Kelly “lied to me, twice” last month and on Friday in “agreeing to have the post-interview conversation off the record,” but did not deny that he cursed and yelled at her and said that Americans didn’t care about Ukraine, which he is set to visit on January 30.
His statement continued, “it is shameful that this reporter chose to violate the basic rules of journalism and decency. This is another example of how unhinged the media has become in its quest to hurt President Trump and this administration.”
As NPR’s media correspondent David Folkenflik noted, however, the State Department’s own transcript of the interview both shows that Pompeo “did not contradict” Kelly when she confirmed that she would ask him about Ukraine.
And while he asked to talk to her without a recorder on after the interview, he did not specify that their conversation would be off the record and thus un-reportable, a key distinction from simply asking her not to record it.
Pompeo ended his statement by saying: “It is worth noting that Bangladesh is NOT Ukraine,” seemingly implying that Kelly misidentified Bangladesh as Ukraine on the map he brought into the office.
Kelly, a highly-respected veteran foreign correspondent and national security reporter who has reported from Russia, Iraq, and North Korea, additionally holds a master’s degree in European studies from Cambridge University, making it highly unlikely that she would confuse Ukraine and Bangladesh, located in southeast Asia.
Folkenflik added: “if he wants to accuse distinguished NPR host and correspondent of lying, he should produce additional evidence. This administration often has estranged relationship with fact and truth.”
In a statement to Insider, NPR’s senior vice president for news Nancy Barnes defended Kelly, saying, “Mary Louise Kelly has always conducted herself with the utmost integrity, and we stand behind this report.”
He said that he expects Treasury to provide the House Ways and Means Committee with a final decision by May 6 after receiving legal conclusions from the Department of Justice.
Neal made the request for Trump’s tax returns under Section 6103 of the federal tax code, which states that the Treasury secretary “shall furnish” tax returns upon written request of the chairmen of Congress’s tax committees, provided that the documents are reviewed in a closed session.
The April 23 deadline was Neal’s second deadline for the administration to provide Trump’s tax documents, as it missed his initial deadline of April 10. At the time, Mnuchin said Treasury was unable to complete its review of Neal’s request by the initial deadline.
Neal said in a statement Tuesday that he plans “to consult with counsel about my next steps.”
“Secretary Mnuchin and the White House have blatantly interfered with the IRS’s obligation to provide the president’s tax returns, and action is needed to force this administration to follow the law,” he added.
Mnuchin said in his Tuesday letter to Neal that the chairman’s request “presents the question whether there are any legal limits on the ability of a Congressional tax-writing committee to obtain an individual’s private tax returns from the IRS and disclose them publicly.”
The Treasury secretary took issue with Neal’s stated purpose for requesting Trump’s tax returns.
Neal said in his initial letter requesting the tax returns that he wanted them because the Ways and Means Committee is considering legislation and conducting oversight about how the IRS audits and enforces tax laws against presidents.
But Mnuchin said that Neal’s request for the documents was “the culmination of a long-running, well-documented effort to expose the President’s tax returns for the sake of exposure.”
“The public record demonstrates that the animating purpose of this effort was and remains exposure of a political opponent’s private tax information,” he added.
Mnuchin said that Neal’s stated purpose about interest in the extent to which the IRS audits presidents is “difficult to accept on its face” and that the terms of Neal’s request don’t fit his stated purpose since he requested tax information from only the current president, whose audits are ongoing.
Mnuchin said Treasury would be happy to provide Neal with more information about the IRS’s process for conducting mandatory audits of presidents and encouraged Neal to “defer” his request for Trump’s tax returns until after the Ways and Means Committee works with Treasury “to meet its stated legislative needs.”
The Treasury secretary also said it would be a “misinterpretation” for Neal to treat his response as a denial of the request since Treasury plans to make a final decision by May 6 and hasn’t yet granted or denied Neal’s request.
It is not a surprise that Treasury missed Democrats’ second deadline.
The president has made it clear that he does not want Congress to receive his tax documents. During the 2016 campaign, he became the first major-party nominee in decades to refuse to voluntarily release his returns, citing an audit. The IRS, however, has said audits don’t prevent people from releasing their own tax information.
White House spokesman Hogan Gidley on Tuesday reiterated Trump’s desire to not release his returns while under audit.
“As I understand it, the president’s pretty clear. Once he’s out of audit, he’ll think about doing it, but he’s not inclined to do so at this time,” Gidley said on Fox News.
The fight over Trump’s tax returns is one of several battles that Democrats and Trump are having over investigations into the president’s finances. On Monday, Trump and his businesses filed a lawsuit in an effort to block an accounting firm from complying with a congressional subpoena for financial records about the president.
Democrats are expected to take further steps in their efforts to obtain Trump’s tax returns following the second missed deadline. Eventually, the matter is expected to result in a court case.
Hong Kong (CNN)A man in the Philippines has died from the Wuhan coronavirus — the first time a death has been reported outside mainland China since the outbreak began in December.
One of Italy’s most popular travel destinations is under water after it was hit by the highest tide in 50 years.
Flooding in Venice hit the second-highest levels ever recorded in history, and the historic canal city braces for yet another wave on Wednesday.
Venice’s Mayor Luigi Brugnaro blamed climate change for the “dramatic situation” and called for a speedy completion of a long-delayed project to construct off-shore barriers.
“Now the government must listen,” he said on Twitter. “These are the effects of climate change… the costs will be high.”
According to the Sun,exceptionally high tides that produce major flooding occur every four years. However, the city usually experiences minor flooding about four times a year.
Brugnaro also tweeted various photos that showed historic tourist attractions under water such as St. Mark’s Square, which was one of the worst hit areas. Photos surfaced of shopkeepers struggling to minimize the damage as water poured into their stores.
Brugnaro also noted that St. Mark’s Basilica had suffered major damage from the high levels of water, raising new concerns for the mosaics and other artworks. According to the BBC, this is the sixth time the basilica flooded in 1,200 years with four of those times occurring within the past 20 years.
Photos on social media showed a city ferry, taxi boats and gondolas grounded on walkways flanking canals.
The high-water mark hit 74 inches late Tuesday, meaning more than 85 percent of the city was flooded. The highest level ever recorded was 76 inches during infamous flooding in 1966.
Officials projected a second wave as high as 63 inches at midmorning Wednesday.
One person, a man in his 70s, died on the barrier island of Pellestrina, apparently of electrocution, said Danny Carrella, an official on the island with 3,500 inhabitants.Media outletsreport that a second man was found dead in his home. He said the situation there remained dramatic, with about three feet of water still present due to broken pumps.
The long-delayed off-shore barriers, called “Moses,” were meant to limit flooding of the city, caused by southerly winds that push the tide into Venice. But the controversial project opposed by environmentalists concerned about damaging the delicate lagoon eco-system has been delayed by cost-overruns and corruption scandals, with no completion date in site.
Luca Zaia, governor of the Veneto region, told the Italian news channel SkyTG24 that the barriers were almost complete, but it wasn’t clear if they would work against such flooding.
“Despite 5 billion euros under water, St. Mark’s Square certainly wouldn’t be secure,” Zaia said, referring to one of Venice’s lowest points that floods when there is an inundation of 31.5 inches.
Brugnaro said that the flood levels represent “a wound that will leave indelible signs.”
Contributing: Associated Press. Follow Adrianna Rodriguez on Twitter: @AdriannaUSAT.
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